18 civil-engineering-soil-structure-interaction Postdoctoral positions at University of Florida
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PhD (foreign equivalent acceptable) in the field of Soil Science, Agronomy, Agriculture and Biological Engineering or a related field is required. Candidates must be supportive of the mission
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Familiarity with LiDAR data processing, especially GEDI Knowledge of fire ecology and land use change processes Experience with Google Earth Engine or other cloud-based geospatial platforms Experience with
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, there are several exciting opportunities for a variety of very interesting projects beyond structure-function studies of cytoskeletal proteins that control signaling downstream of adherens junctions and focal
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on conducting problem-oriented and policy-relevant research, developing econometric models to understand the economic and behavioral incentives for using new farm management practices and technology adoption and
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integrates food engineering, food virology, and quantitative microbial risk assessment (QMRA). Current research is focused on evaluating the thermal inactivation of human norovirus and its surrogates in
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Association of American Universities (AAU), the University of Florida is the state’s oldest and most comprehensive land-, sea-, and space-grant university, with an enrollment of over 50,000 students. In 2025
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of interest. The teaching assignment is 3/3/2. UF is the state’s oldest, largest, and most comprehensive land grant university with an enrollment of over 50,000 students and was ranked 7th in the country among
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engineering support. Ongoing projects in lab include structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of developing children, and clinical conditions including autism, traumatic brain injury, diabetes
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Culicoides midges and their vector competence for Oropouche virus. The postdoctoral associate will participate in studies evaluating interactions between Oropouche virus and candidate arthropod vectors
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management of bacterial and fungal plant pathogens and plant parasitic nematodes by the use of soil micropredators (Martins et al. 2022). This is a collaborative, interdisciplinary project funded by the USDA